I think if I had to go inside my lifetime I have to say Puckett's catch, game 6, 1991 World Series. Otherwise, the Shot is definitely the top. Just listening to the audio from the call makes me freak out.

IML - In my lifetime, I would have to say Buckner's error. For several reasons. One - I am a lifelong Mets fan. Two - my father's a Sawx fan. And three - the emotion, circumstances, thrill, and the fact I remember banging on the bathroom door as my father was in there (since he thought it was over & done) yelling, "You'll never believe what just happened. The Mets are alive!"

Even if conspiracy is that Chan Ho Park threw a batting practice fastball over the middle of the plate, I think the greatest moment ever was Cal Ripken's 3rd inning home run in his final All Star game.

And the thing about it is, unlike a lot of the moments that come to mind.....it won't KILL the Reds fans to think about it, because they came back to win Game 7.

A lot of the moments, although exalting for the winners, were utterly demoralizing for the losers. Like, if the Braves had won Game 7 in '91....they might not be killing themselves over losing game 6 singlehandedly to Kirby!

Best moment in baseball history? Does it get any better than Scott Brosius? I was in the house that night, and I ended up about ten rows from where I started. Pandemonium was defined that night.

Add up the lingering effects of September 11th on the sports psyche, the Yankums being America's Team for once, BH Kim on the mound for the second straight night, the Yanks behind in the 9th with two outs again, *that* feeling of mystique and aura in the air, and a lovable third-baseman jacking one out of the park to send it to extras.

With all the implications and all the ridiculousness, I don't think it gets any better than that. It can't. That was too freaky to be reproduced, and the situational backdrop will hopefully never be in our minds again.

No need for apologies...it needed to be said and probably will again. Sports arguments tend to bring out some bad sides of people...so, it's expected. Just imagine what people like Bayless hear/see. Could be worse :-)

Something like Dave Roberts' steal obviously led to something great.....but at the time it happened, there was no guarantee he'd score, or that the Sox would win THAT game, let alone the next three.

Something like Bobby Thomson....you knew right then and there how great it was, its context was already defined. Even something like Reggie's 3rd homer....he had just hit 2 earlier in the game, so when he hit it, you knew what it meant at the moment it happened.

DS, sorry man no offense. I was just trying to make a point (actually i was trying to show how absurd my own post was). It wasn't meant as a cheap shot. In the words of Stuart Scott, "hugs and hand pounds everyone."

My favorite moment? Gotta go with Mark McGuire's #62. Before you go slamming me for backing the roids user, just remember that everyone who had a great baseball moment was/is probobly on the roids too.

This one requires some thought, something I'm not fully prepared to do seeing as how I'm on a caffeine low as my morning 36oz coffee is wearing off.

Obviously, as a Die Hard, card carrying (not really, thank God) member of Red Sox' Nation, anything from the 2004 postseason or the 2001 World Series instantly makes me smile. But those are too easy.

Since we're talking "In My Lifetime", which is admittedly short to date (Born late in '81), I don't have a whole lot to base this on.

From an overall world/baseball perspective, watching Mike Piazza single handedly wake up all of NYC with his game winner over the Braves just after 9/11 might be the single best "goose-bump" moment for me. Forget that it helped a New York team and hurt the only National League team I've ever supported, it just seemed right, after a week where so much else was wrong.

Other than that, for moments aside from the 2001 & 2004 postseasons, I'd have to refer back to Pedro in the 1999 All Star Game. He was an artist at work, setting down six of the game's best, in Fenway, after the 1998 home run love-fest. After having Teddy Ballgame come out for the first pitch, I got to watch Petey strike out Barry Larkin, Larry Walker, and Sammy Sosa in the first, followed by Mark McGwire and then Jeff Bagwell on a strike-'em-out / throw-'em-out with Matt Williams at second base.

Admittedly, I watched both events from home, and I'm certain each was 100 times more electrifying in person. But I can't think of any two other moments in the last 24 years that I witnessed that we as great as those.

Just based on my personal reaction to the moment and the fact that people attempted to literally kill me with baseball bats in my dorm that night, the Aaron Boone shot off Wakefield capped off one of the best sports nights of my life and is probably the most memorable for me. Obviously from a historical standpoint it isn't the greatest moment ever but in my experience it was the greatest moment.

The whole night people are laughing at me and giving me crap and then they storm back and win it on the homer - too much.

I'm with Poppa Perks on the greatness of the 2001 Series. Being a D-backs fan (and only 23 years old), when that broken bat single from Luis Gonzalez cleared Jeter's head, well, nothing will feel so wonderful.

I can't believe no one has mentioned this. It has to be Cal Ripkin breaking Lou Gehrig's consecutive game streak. Come on!! The game was delayed forever! Ripkin broke a streak no one ever thought could be broken and I guarentee that his record withstands the test to time. Today's players don't care about consecutive game. Who's closest? Tejada??? He's over 1000 games away. He'll never touch it.

October 23rd, 1993, Joe Carter's game winning home run! I was 10 years old, yet I still remember the date it happened. I was at a friend's birthday party and we all were going crazy. I believe this is the only come from behind bottom of the 9th homer to win the World Series ever.

I guess my own personal greatest baseball moments aren't probably hugely historical, but at the time they seemed like "the greatest games in history" (yes, I have a penchant for making current things profoundly historical as well).

The first was game 5 of the Seattle-New York divisonal series when Griffey scored the game winner. Granted Griffey is my favorite player ever, but it was still important at the time for me.

The second is probably the finish to the Arizona-New York world series in '01. Again, there are outside factors involved with this one (First baseball playoffs living in a college dorm, so it seemed extra cool to have everybody rooting for the same team. In Minnesota, apparently people don't like the Yankees).

That's it. I also wanted to get peoples take on the inevitable news of Girardi getting fired in Florida. It seems like there's something wrong with firing a coach that did a great job with so little, just because of some disagreements with management. Dan, what's your opinion since Girardi is a Northwestern Grad? Your Wildcats get no respect.

From http://www.baseballlibrary.com/baseballlibrary/features/postseason/mariners.stm

1995 was the season that saved baseball in Seattle. Capping a miraculous September surge that saw them end the season tied with Anaheim, the Mariners earned the first post-season berth in franchise history by thumping the Angels in a one-game playoff at the Kingdome. After dropping the opening two stanzas of their five-game ALDS matchup with the Yankees, the Mariners pulled off three straight dramatic wins. In the classic Game Five the M's rallied from an early deficit against Yanks starter David Cone to force extra innings before Martinez brought them back one last time on a two-run 11th inning double, inspiring pandemonium at the Kingdome.

Uhhh, hello. Kirk Gibson's home run anyone. I dont know if its because I was younger and it left such an impression on me. You have to remember the circumstances. Injured hitter fighting off pain in the tunnel warming up, an UNTOUCHABLE closer in Eck. Game 1 on the line. The entire momentum of that series was held in the balance. And Vin Scully's call will always stick out in my mind. Kirk Gibson's home run is my greatest moment in SPORTS history personally, and im not even a dodgers fan.

"The 2-2 pitch to Willie Wilson ... struck him out ... and the Phillies are World's Champions!"

Now, if we're talking a moment that could be considered in the Pantheon (TM) of Greatest Baseball Moment Ever ... how 'bout this one ...

Game Seven, 1926 World Series. Grover Cleveland Alexander comes in, unexpectedly, to pitch for the Cardinals with the bases loaded and the dangerous Tony Lazzeri at the plate.

Alexander is hungover, having gone on another of his famous benders after having beaten the Yankees in Game Six the day before. He tells his manager that he wants no warm-up tosses for fear that the Yankees will surmise that he is unfit to take the mound.

Ol' Pete fans Lazzeri, then hangs on to record the save and a Cardinal championship as Babe Ruth ends the Series caught stealing second. When asked after the game why he tried to steal, Ruth admitted that the way Alexander was pitching, Ruth needed to get to second on his own ... he figured they would never get two hits to bring him around.

I know we're not supposed to talk about Fantasy in here, but lately my favorite moment had to be on Sunday, when Ray Durham got a pinch hit out during the meaningless Dodgers/Giants game... because Durham got an out for another team, I won my fantasy league by .001 in OBP.

Best pinch hitting out ever!

Other than that, gotta go when Damon hit the grand slam in game 7 of the ALCS, at the point when all the Red Sox fans looked at each other and said, "you know, I really think this is going to happen."

I wasn't around to see it, but Bill Mazeroski's walk-off in game 7 of the 1960 Series has got to be the greatest HR of all time. It's the only walk-off to end a game 7. Yankee pitchers had shutout the Pirates in their 3 wins making a homer by the light hitting Maz even more improbable.

My two seem to have been mentioned already, this is mainly personal (though I think 1986 cuts it as one of the greatest moments period).

-- Piazza's post-9/11 home-run. I cried. I'm not sure I can explain what that entire first game meant (or that year's World Series, where I unashamedly rooted for the Yankees, and it did my heart a lot of good to see the New Yorkers at those games).

-- Game 6. I was eight, and this game was single-handedly responsible for not only making me a Mets fan, but for making me a sports fan, period. And the drama of that comeback is truly unbelievable.

It was Ken Griffey Jr. bucking the trend and taking LESS (a lot less) money to play for his hometown, small market team.The injuries have dampened it slightly, but the idea of one of the greatest players ever taking less money...incredible. Humble, 'roid free, fun, and always, always plays 100% on the field.

Oh, my... Hank Aaron's 715th! There has never been a moment that put goosebumps on the goosebumps the way that home run did. Others come close...Ripken, Maris' # 61, Mazerowski's homer to win the series for the Pirates and Nolan's 5th no hitter but Hammerin' Hank ranks Number One for me.

In ranking these, great moments shouldn't be caused by others' failings....that's why Buckner's play isn't as great as Boone's homer. Someone making a play is always greater than someone NOT making a play to turn a game.

Same idea with the Yankees homers in '01 off of BH Kim....the first time it happened, it was a great moment, but then as he imploded game after game, the succeeding homers weren't universally "great moments", unless you're specifically a fan of the team it's happening for....does that make sense?

The great thing about Gibson's homer is that it's one of the few plays where the radio and TV calls are equally famous. Jack Buck's "I don't believe what I just saw" versus Vin Scully's "You talk about a roll of the dice...."

Oh wow, Francisco Cabrera. I was only 10 years-old at the time, and fell asleep halfway through that game. But I'll never forget the retelling from my dad the next morning and then in the next issue of Sports Illustrated. It also sticks out in my head, that picture of Andy Van Slyke, Cecil Espy and Barry Bonds sitting in the outfield playing fake cards while waiting for the umpire who had a stroke to be attended to. And then that picture of Van Slyke sitting in the outfield with his head down after the game was over, staring in disbelief.

And I remember the nicknames "Abra Cabrera" and "Slow as Molasses Sid Bream"... how the hell did Bream score from first on that play?

It really was significant: the Braves made the playoffs each of the next 13 years and the Pirates have now gone 14 straight without making the playoffs. In fact, they haven't even finished at or above .500 since 1992. Incidentally, 1992 had also been the last time the Brewers had finished at or above .500, a streak they broke this year, which means 14 years and running is the lone record for the Pirates. (And with Detroit this year breaking their 12-year streak, second place is now a tie of 9-years between the Orioles and Devil Rays).

I hate the Twins, but that 10 inning game in the '91 series against the Braves where Knoblauch faked Lonnie Smith into slowing down at second on a double, preventing him from scoring, was about as awesome as a single play gets.

Of course, the Knoblauch's subsequent career-ending case of the yips just shows that you shouldn't F with Lonnie's voodoo.

Greatest baseball moment ever....there are a lot and NOT being a Yankees fan I would have to go with Drysdale's perfect game in the World Series. Greatest feat would be DiMaggio's hit streak. Remember, I AM NOT A YANKEES fan (Cubs fan, ouch!).

My best baseball moment ever? Edgar Renteria's one-hopper back to Keith Foulke and then Joe Buck saying, "Boston fans have been longing to hear it..." I will never hate Keith Foulke b/c of that moment and I must have watched it about a million and one times. I still get choked up.

Greatest Baseball Moment - The first day of Pete Reiser's first major league season. To be there and see the start of something special that is a common unknown to many sports fans, the agony that ensued and what can be defined as the epitomy of "having everything and being the best, except luck on your side".

Top of the eighth. Runners on Second and third. Indians up 1-0 over the Mariners. I'm 10, watching Game 6 of the 1995 ALCS, far past my bedtime.

Randy Johnson checks the runners. He goes into his motion and...WILD PITCH! Runner scores from third as the catcher jogs after the ball. Turning, he sees Kenny Lofton bearing down on Johnson, running from second base. Johnson has no idea; his look of shock as the catcher hurls the ball to him says it all. Lofton slides across the plate, breaking the Mariners' spirit. I go nuts. The Indians go to the World Series for the first time in 41 years.

All-Time great moment? I can't say. I can say that it certainly was for me, and that's how you have to define the moments, personally.

Being that I'm a 22-year old Canadian from Toronto, my greatest baseball moment ever is definitely Joe Carter's walk off home run in Game 6 of the 1993 World Series against the Phillies to make it back-to-back Championships for the Blue Jays.... the reaction in the city at the time was something I'll remember for the rest of my life.

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DanShanoff.com is a sports-blog spin-off of my long-time ESPN.com column, "The Daily Quickie." Anchored by an early-morning post of must-know topics, the blog is updated frequently throughout the day with new posts and user comments.